Archive for April, 2007

Posted on Apr 30th, 2007

Ten years ago, the term online schooling might not be very appealing; just like the iron horses in the early part of the 19th century or an airplane in the beginning of the 20th century. Internet was still underdeveloped in 1996 compared to what we have now. And the conventional today may not be acceptable by the general population in 1996.

But we don’t live in 1996 anymore. We are now in the era where everything is possible and acceptable. Just like studying outside the school, in front of your computer at the very comforts of your home. This is called online schooling.

Thinking of entering online schooling can arouse discomfort for some. This is quite understandable since it is not the usual way of learning just like those people who have tried airplane as a way to travel for the first time. However, with the reputation online schools are gaining, the way students learn is transforming in an “unconventional way”.

If you are one of those students who are considering this relatively new form of learning, here are the things you should know- the pros and cons of online schooling:

Pros

  • No time wasted on traveling
  • Whether you live in the most remote town in the United States (provided you have an internet connection) or at the top of the tallest building in your city, you can always be on time to study your lessons. Online schooling eliminates the time you have to prepare to dress up for school. It also removes the time you have to spend sitting on the taxi or waiting for the green light. With online schooling, your home and your classroom are the same.

  • Can attend home needs anytime
  • For people who need to attend important things around the home, online schooling works best. For instance: you have a baby to take care of or you have a several things that must be done around the house. If before you have to find ways to squeeze all the items in your “to-do-list” for one whole day, now online schooling will give you more time on other things as it eliminates the time you have to spend on preparation for school.

  • No more classmates to mind
  • When you get online schooling, the classroom is all yours. You don’t have to fight on your seat, you don’t have to get along with a group, and you don’t have to be nice or rude to others.

    Cons

  • Online school competence
  • There are many online schools to choose from. The question is: would you be able to land on a job after you have spent all your time and money on your chosen online school? One advice is: do research on the competency of several online schools and consider the credit they can give once you step into the working world.

  • Personal competence
  • Can you learn on your own or should you require a board and a talking professor to absorb the lesson? There are some students who are better studying alone. There are some who are not. If you think you are capable of learning without the need of the actual classroom discussion, then you can consider online schooling.

  • Environment cooperation
  • Is your home fit for studying? Can you concentrate with all the destructions you can get in your home? Many homes are not fit to become a school. It may be because there are children around, or the neighborhood’s dogs are always barking, or your home is simply not conducive to learning.

    All these only say one thing: home schooling is not for everyone. Do more research and consideration before entering home schooling program. If you think you are fit and you can benefit more on home schooling, then it is all up to you.

    Khieng ‘Ken’ Chho - Online Online Schooling Resources. For more, visit Ken’s website: http://onlineschooling.1w3b.net/

    Posted on Apr 29th, 2007

    1. Setting the Bar Too Low

    Research has shown that one of the greatest determining factors in a student’s performance is teacher expectation. This is no different for your homeschool student. You may think the world of your little angel, but every parent has their biases. Admit it. Maybe it has crossed your mind that while Bobby is a genius in math, he really struggles at reading. Perhaps Emma loves to read aloud, but she isn’t the best with numbers. Don’t feel bad, every parent has preconceived ideas about their child’s ability and you are no different. However, in order for your student to reach their full potential, it is imperative that you set aside any notions you have about their ability and go into every lesson knowing that they will succeed. When you expect the best, you get the best.

    2. Teaching the Way YOU Liked to Learn

    You may have heard from others, or experienced yourself, that certain types of teaching styles are more successful than others. I understand this firsthand. Those of us with a lesser ability to navigate the roads may need to look at a map to find our way. Other may not retain those directions until they have driven the route themselves. You might find that when you read something it doesn’t “stick”, but when you attend a lecture or have a friend explains it to you, everything becomes crystal clear. Everyone learns differently. Don’t expect that because you learned best when shown pictures, that the same is true for your child. Experiment with different styles of teaching and ask for your child’s input to help you figure out what works best for them.

    3. Ignoring Classroom Management

    -“I want the classroom to be a place where my child can explore and learn freely, I don’t want the rules to prevent them from exploring.” -“I don’t need to go over the rules! My child is always well behaved.” Parents think that because they have already established a discipline system in their home, with rules and consequences, that there is no need to come up with similar strategies for class time. Well they are wrong. Class time needs to be separated out from your regular at home activity. Rules and routines specific to the classroom need to be put in place so that it is clear for both the student and teacher what is acceptable during learning time. School rules and routines provide for maximum learning time, so don’t leave them out of your plans.

    4. Teaching 1 Thing at a Time

    When you plan your schedule for each day, do you break up your time by subject? Reading from 8-9, math from 9-10, etc. Of course you do, who doesn’t? This isn’t a bad way to schedule your time either, as long as you have a big picture in mind. Your child will be better able to retain all the subjects that you teach if they are interrelated. If you design units of study with a big picture or theme that applies to math, reading and science, they will retain more and have more fun in the process. For example: if you want your 7 year old to understand that animals have predictable lifecycles don’t just teach it during science time. Use books on the topic during reading. Teach multiplication using frog legs (5 frogs with 4 legs each…how many legs in all).

    5. Teaching is Telling

    This is a pretty basic mistake, but one that I still hear about all the time. Parents explain a something new to their student and don’t understand why it doesn’t “stick”. The simple answer is that teaching is not just telling. If you want to be a good teacher, as we all do, you need to learn a variety of ways to teach your child. There is hands-on learning, inquiry learning, visual aids, reciprocal teaching, and technology-based learning. I could go on and on with different ways of instructing that can improve your child’s learning, I have a great deal of training and experience in this area that I use on a daily basis in my own home, but the important thing is that you know that part of teaching is learning. You need to constantly be seeking out new techniques and tools to improve your skills. As you improve so will your child.

    Megan Wiles is a successful writer for Homeschool-Guidance.com. With 7 years as an educator she hopes to lend her knowledge and practical experience to others. She provides a free e-course on "Maximizing Your Child’s Learning Potential" and other valuable information on her website.

    Posted on Apr 28th, 2007

    The public school system in America is a dinosaur and the Ice Age is not far off. With all of the advances we’ve made in technology and as a society in the last 50 years, it’s ludicrous to see our children being educated in the standardized system used 50 years ago. The influx of parents who are home schooling and the home schooling resources available now versus 10 years ago attest to the fact that parents are fed up.

    Not only do the majority of public schools not work, but our children are getting less and less education. American children are getting further and further behind their Japanese and German counterparts; and in a time where the economy is global, how do our children remain competitive in the job market of tomorrow?

    Besides the threat of violence at school, the lack of education going on there, the generally sliding test scores and the lack of alternatives; the economical drain on property tax payers to support this lumbering, antiquated system is phenomenal. Simply put, if all of us had the option of doing something else, most of us would. Private schools, magnet schools or home schooling alternatives are a reality.

    For some of us though, there is currently no feasible alternative. Many of us simply cannot afford to shell out college-sized tuition starting in grade school. For many more who work outside the home, the time required to start home schooling is a commitment that we’re not sure we can incorporate into our already packed schedules.

    What is your child really learning at school currently that will translate into success and financial freedom and entrepreneurial skills later on in life? If we all sat down and looked through the graded papers our children bring home and asked, “How does this turn into dollars and cents later on?” the answer would be, “Most of it doesn’t.”

    So what can you do right now, on the budget and with the time you have to improve the quality of your child’s education?

    Expand where you’re at.

    What is your child learning about money right now? Normally we learn early in grade school how to recognize money (what’s a nickel, what’s a dollar), we see math used in story problems where the concept is actually addition or subtraction; and that’s our money education unless we receive additional education in college. For a subject that is so near and dear to our hearts, money is not prominent in most of our educations.

    This is where a lack of education spells a future lack of funds. You want your child to become a millionaire later in life; or even just be financially independent, you will be responsible for showing them how to think and what to do with money. Setting aside one hour a week to discuss finances with your child would give them so much more of a head start than they have right now. Make it interesting, make it personal, teach them what you wish someone would have taken the time to teach you. Are you paying bills this week? Have your child sit down and watch what you’re doing. Explain the method of accounting you use and what you’re paying for and how much. Are you setting up a budget for the family? Give your child the opportunity to give input on the budget as well as see how it works.

    If finances are a problem in your family, your child needs to understand money now more than ever. If you’re facing creditors, bankruptcy or foreclosure, why keep your child in the dark regarding the circumstances? If you’re investing for the future or for their college, why not explain what your goals are? Can you explain your own financial goals or why you’ve chosen a specific investment? Can you explain simple stock market terms, what is a certificate of deposit, what is a treasury bond? If not, maybe this is the first step in learning more about your finances – teaching your child. Don’t be embarrassed to start at the beginning; just start.

    What is your child learning about business right now? For most people’s children, their business education is confined to: trying to explain what their parents do for work, going to work with them one day a year and then getting their first job at 16. They will learn more about business if they go to college with a business major, but what practical, real-world experience are they receiving? Can you realistically expect someone with that limited amount of business knowledge to start and run their own business? How did you learn about business if you own your own?

    You had to jump in and do it.

    Whether you own your own business or not, all of us can agree that an education in business is a great way to cover core concepts and grasp a general idea of a topic, but experience in business is priceless. Your child starting a paper route or a babysitting business will teach them on a personal level what coming to work with you once a year would never do.

    Expand where you’re at. The entrepreneurial spirit that you are growing is an education that your child will never forget. Rather than sit back and watch our children waste precious learning time in front of the television, as a family commit to one hour a week getting an education on money. Go to the library, get on the Internet, find material that excites and inspires you and your child will become excited and inspired about money.

    Home schooling is a term that really means, “The buck stops here.” If we choose a better quality of education for our children, we have to supplement at home. If we choose a successful mindset for our children, we have to show by example. If we want more for our children regarding money and business potential for our children than we have had, we have to provide them with more right out of the gate.

    Right now there are more resources available for at-home education than ever before. We have more information at our fingertips than any generation before us. What is our excuse if we don’t use it? Ultimately, what will give your child a leg up in a global economy and an ever-changing job market will be the confidence you instilled in them and an education than can be calculated into dollars and cents.

    Cheryl Hall (http://www.millionaireKids101.com) has the keys for parents to help their children become financially successful. She has created 3 courses to help children learn how to think about money and start on the road to wealth and independence; Millionaire Kids 101, 201 and Millionaire Masters. Cheryl is a successful real estate investor and has been helping new investors start on their way to financial freedom.

    Posted on Apr 27th, 2007

    After deciding to homeschool your child, you now to work out what you are going to teach them. There are many curriculum choices you can make. You can purchase pre-packaged curriculum, make your own curriculum, or you could even teach a combination of both. Some parents prefer to focus their teachings on their religious beliefs. However, it is important to keep an open mind and remember that your children are their own people and they should be taught about the world from many different perspectives. Remember that there is no “right” way to teach your children because the “right” way for one child may not be “right” for another. It is important to be flexible and change your curriculum to tailor to your children as you discover their individual requirements as they grow.

    So what is Pre-Packaged Curriculum anyway? Well Pre-Packaged, "school in a box", or "all-in-one" Curriculum are comprehensive education packages that cover many subjects (usually an entire year worth). They contain all required books and materials. Some even include pencils and writing paper. The intent of the “school in a box” is to try to recreate the school environment in the home. They are typically based on the same subject-area expectations as public schools, which allows an easy transition into school after being home schooled, if desired. They are among the most expensive options for the homeschooled, but are easy to use and require minimal preparation.

    The majority of today’s home-educated students use an eclectic mix of materials for their Homeschooling needs. For example, they might use a pre-designed program for language, arts or mathematics, and fill in history with reading and field trips, art with classes at a community center, science through homeschool science clubs, physical education with memberships in local sports teams, etc. This has been proved to be one of the most successful ways of educating the Homeschooled child.

    Home educators are also able to take advantage of educational programs at museums, community centers, athletic clubs, after-school programs, churches, science preserves, parks, and other community resources. Secondary school level students often take classes at community colleges, which typically have open admission policies.

    One of the major benefits of Homeschooling is the ability to blend lessons using a central theme, for example, a study unit about Native Americans could combine lessons in: social studies - like how different tribes live now and lived prior to colonization; art - such as making Native American clothing; history of Native Americans in the US; reading from a specialized reading list; and the science of plants used by Native Americans. You could use this same technique on another study unit where you chose another broad topic to study.

    Homeschooling also offers student paced learning. This is similar to “all-in-one” curriculum and is often referred to as “Paces”. These workbooks allow the student to progress at an appropriate speed that suits their individual needs. They allow the student to master concepts, before moving on to the next subject, instead relying on the speed of the teacher and other students where they may move on to the next subject too quickly or not move on quickly enough.

    Another form of Homeschooling is “Unschooling”, that is, an area in which students are not directly instructed but encouraged to learn through exploring their interests. Known also as “interest-led” or “child-led” learning, Unschooling attempts to provide opportunities with games and real life problems where a child will learn without coercion.

    Unschooling advocates claim that children learn best by doing. A child may learn reading and math skills by playing card games, better spelling and other writing skills because he’s inspired to write a science fiction story for publication, or local history by following a zoning or historical-status dispute.

    No matter which technique you decide to use when you start Homeschooling your children, you should remember to be flexible and revise your teaching choices, as you will need to adapt your curriculum to better tailor to your child’s needs as they become apparent.

    Copyright © 2006 Matt Weight

    For more information on Homeschooling visit http://www.homeschooling-secrets-revealed.com

    Posted on Apr 26th, 2007

    Wikipedia states that “Home education, also called homeschooling or home school, is an educational alternative in which children are educated at home by their parents, in contrast to the compulsory attendance which takes place in an institution with a campus such as a public school or private school.”

    Around the world Homeschooling has been increasing quite substantially over the last 4 years. In 2003, in the United States, approximately 1.1 million children were Home Schooled, up 29% from 850,000 in 1999. Recent figures show that Homeschooling in other Western Countries are also continuing to grow. For example, an estimated 50,000 children are considered "home-educated" in the United Kingdom; Australia - 26,500; and in Canada (as at 2001) it was estimated that 80,000 children were educated at home with the numbers continuing to increase.

    Most home education advocates have individual motivations to home-educate. Academic and social results of home education are varied and are the source of vibrant debate. Some feel that they can more effectively tailor a student’s academic program to suit an individual strengths and weaknesses, especially children who are gifted or have learning disabilities. Others are religious parents who see non-religious education as contrary to their moral or religious systems. Still others feel that the negative social pressures of schools, such as bullying, drugs, school violence, and other school-related problems, are impacting negatively to a child’s development. Many parents simply like the idea of teaching their own children rather than letting someone else do so.

    A common concern voiced about home-educated children is they lack the social interaction with students and society that a school environment provides. Many home-education families address these concerns by joining numerous organizations, including home-education cooperatives, independent study programs and specialized enrichment groups for physical education, art, music, and debate. Most are also active in community groups. Home-educated children generally socialize with other children the same way that school children do: outside of school, via personal visits and through sports teams, clubs, and religious groups.

    The academic effectiveness of homeschooling is largely a settled issue. “Numerous studies have confirmed the academic integrity of home education programs, demonstrating that on average, home-educated students outperform their publicly-run school peers by 30 to 37 percentile points across all subjects.” The performance gaps between minorities and gender that plague publicly-run schools are virtually non-existent amongst home-educated students.

    Notable home-educated individuals

    • Thomas Edison, United States, scientist and inventor
    • Alexander Graham Bell, Scotland, Inventor (Telephone, Hydrofoil)
    • Dakota Fanning, United States, actress
    • Hilary Duff, United States, Actress/Singer
    • Charles Evans Hughes, United States, Governor of New York, United States Secretary of State, and Chief Justice of the United States
    • Frankie Muniz, United States, Actor
    • Rosa Parks, United States, civil rights activist
    • Susan La Flesche Picotte, United States, first American Indian woman physician
    • Woodrow Wilson, United States, the only United States President to hold a Ph.D.
    • George Washington, United States, First United States President
    • Abraham Lincoln, United States, President during American Civil War

    “Education is what remains after one has forgotten everything learnt in school” - Albert Einstein (1879-1955)

    Copyright © 2006 Matt Weight

    For more information on Homeschooling visit http://www.homeschooling-secrets-revealed.com

    Posted on Apr 25th, 2007

    Home is you and your children’s primary school. In it cognitive, emotional, spiritual and social aspects are developed and honed. In fact, home contributed to the totality of your persona.

    Home never ceases to be a school. It continues to be such in order to make and mold you. It can be a school ad infinitum.

    Children are devoted to learn new things. This hunger for education exists within and outside the school. It is long-lasting and it follows the children. Thus, even if they are out of the basic institution for education they can learn a lot.

    Even if you are not enrolled in a university, you can still acquire knowledge. In addition, this learning can be had without traveling much. Yes, you can have same knowledge that other students acquire even when you just stay at home. This system is called home schooling.

    Home schooling, otherwise known as home education, is a curriculum designed for children to study at home. This is in contrary to the usual education offered by an education institution like the parochial or public school.

    When parents feel that complete education can no way be acquired in private or public schools, they resort to home schooling.

    Home schooling is legal in all parts of the United States. However, said laws may differ from one state to another. In fact, home schooling evolves around three categories. They are private school laws, equivalency laws and home education laws. Inquiry must be done first in order to know which of the three laws are suited to you and your children.

    Home schooling is the focal point of a substantial minority in the United States. This minority is composed of parents who desire to give their children the best education that they can get.

    Home schooling is also given to gifted children who are given special attention in connection with their talents and abilities. Most school failed to meet the attention necessary. Thus, parents resort to home schooling as a remedy. Another reason for home schooling is the preservation of values and religion.

    Undeniably, home schooling is the most thrilling innovation in education nowadays.

    Making your kids stay at home to study will not make them social misfits. This is because a crowd is not necessary to learn to adjust socially. Adequate exposure and proper guidance are the things necessary to make your children acquainted with the world.

    The concept of home schooling has started way back in 1850 when most of the American children learned their lessons at home. It has been 156 years since its inception but said concept continue to astound both parents and students.

    Great changes have occurred in the past 25 years. In fact, said revival in the concept of home schooling has resulted to more and more children learning at home. In fact, the number has increased to three million and still growing…

    With home schooling around, you can select the subjects that you can teach your child. You need not worry about several fields of concentration since they can take care of them when they are already young adults or teenagers.

    Learn first what your child is interested in learning. Also discover their skills and talents. From there, you can have the idea where to start. You will also be given the idea on what lessons and activities to give emphasis.

    Teach your children to live their dreams. Start by giving them a good home schooling background.

    freenetpublishing.com is a free site that offers articles and resources. If you want to read or share information on Home and Family you’re always welcome.

    Posted on Apr 24th, 2007

    Do you want to finish college without experiencing the hustle of going out of your house?

    Impossible you might think it is, but with the technology available today, you do not only get the chance of freeing yourself from the jostle of everyday schooling but you will also let you self save plenty of money. Do you want to know how?

    Online schooling is one of the most convenient ways of finishing college without the presence of a classroom. You will be closer to learning as you will be the one to decide the proper time for you to learn. Online schooling uses the convenience of the most useful tool today, the Internet. As long as you have Internet connection in your home, you can enjoy learning in the comfort of your own home.

    If you have kids and you are not secure with the quality of education they will get when sent to conventional schools, you can enroll them to online schooling. You will be the one to control the time and you will know exactly what you kid needs and what they need to improve in terms of learning.

    You are aware that kids spend most of the time playing. When you send them to school, you will not know the things they will be doing there. In online schooling, you are secure about the proper knowledge your kids have to get. In conventional schools, one teacher has to teach more than twenty students at a time. This will divide the attention of the teacher and your kids can be the one to receive least amount of attention. Online schooling can give your kids the proper attention they need. Aside from that, you kids will be comfortable on the way they learn.

    Online schooling is not widely available in huge amount of numbers. If you wish to get your kids enrolled, just find the best online school best for kids. Search for the most outstanding online school on the net. Choose the one with good reputation on teaching kids as they will be the one to feed your kids with what they need. Ask for some advices in choosing which online school is the best. Enroll your kids now and experience the convenience your kids can get while schooling. Your kids do not have to suffer much in order to learn. Give your kids the convenience they need while studying.

    Khieng ‘Ken’ Chho - Online Schooling
    For related articles and other resources, visit Ken’s website: http://onlineschooling.1w3b

    Posted on Apr 23rd, 2007

    It’s 5:30 a.m. on a summer day. I should be sleeping like the rest of the world, ensconced in a woolly blanket of certitude that there is no work today, only vacation. But I can’t really sleep. It’s the first day of school, you see.

    There is an old theory of learning that says education isn’t about teaching students new things but only about reminding them what they already inherently know.

    It’s a high-minded theory that assumes everyone is what my old college president would have termed "educable," that knowledge, like truth, is not relative, but exists on its own plane running parallel to ours and may be accessed by revelation.

    One need only be shown the hidden path to the oracle’s chamber, so to speak, and all will be unveiled.

    Sometimes, though, it’s not the student but the teacher that needs to be shown the way.

    Perhaps we are so inured to others’ needs, so accustomed to our own convenience, that we modern folk oftentimes don’t pay heed to the tragedies occurring before our very eyes. Particularly for parents trying to educate our children, there seems to be a wall in front of our eyes that shields us so often from the truth.

    We place our children in schools in the hopes that they will learn what is needed for them to survive in this world: facts, figures, social aptitude, an inquiring mind, an entrepreneurial spirit.

    And we will show up and be supportive at school assemblies, classroom field trips, endless fund-raisers, sporting events, etc., ad nauseum.

    We provide classroom supplies, chaperoning, transportation, library staffing, even office support, all in hopes that we are furthering our children’s education by setting a good example and freeing up the teachers to do "what they do best."

    Too often, though, what parents get out of this bargain isn’t what was promised. Instead of bright, energetic, go-getter scholars, what we are handed back is children who are lethargic, beaten down and drained of any creativity they once had. We get kids who are indoctrinated into political correctness — which is to say the art of arrogant whininess — but who can barely multiply. We get kids who have been taught in "science" class to recycle to "save" the planet, but who can’t explain to you how an airplane stays in the air or how an internal combustion engine works. We get kids who have been forced to memorize Dr. Martin Luther King’s "I Have a Dream" speech and participate annually in Cinco de Mayo but who can’t explain one contribution of white people to the world other than bringing disease to North America.

    In some schools, it’s not unusual for as many as half the students to drop out before their senior high school year. Of those who hang in there, many seniors can’t even pass an eighth-grade-level exit exam to get their diplomas.

    And just to add to parental enjoyment, along the way, the children have almost certainly been exposed to gay sex, oral sex, premarital sex, contraception, abortion, illegal drug use, alcohol abuse, nihilism and atheism. All under the auspices of the school, and all before sixth grade — kindergarten, if some legislators get their way. Recess and that after-school time before parents come home provide ample opportunity for kids to put into practice what they’ve learned in "skool."

    Parents may seek relief in private schools, but often what they encounter is no better, just more expensive. If you are rich enough, it is still possible to buy your children a real education. If you’re merely well-off, more likely what will happen is you will pay through the nose, and your children will receive an education that is relatively free from the sex- and drug-teaching curricula of the public schools, as well as the more violent forms of playground bullying. But for the most part, the rest of the teaching agenda is the same, particularly if you live in a state like California, where private schools are so regulated that they often just give up and use the same books, the same curricula, same time tables and same test "preparation" procedures as the public schools. If you’re lucky, there might be some time to squeeze in a little religious education.

    That was our experience. Not being much of a corporate yes man myself, we’ve often been on the lower rungs of the economic ladder. Still, we managed to put our son into private schools despite the cost. Sending him to our local public elementary school was out of the question. The first time we went to that school’s office, there were three children being treated by the school nurse after getting beaten up in the halls. The second time we went to that office, the police were there having a "chat" with a boy who looked like he was in about fourth grade.

    So we got our son into a local private school, with high hopes of better things. Now, when he started kindergarten, he was almost a whole year younger than the rest of his classmates because of the oddity of birthday cutoffs, but he still tested above many of them. That glowing moment didn’t last long, however. Soon, we were told that our boy needed a speech therapist because he had trouble pronouncing certain syllables. We took him back to our local public school, which actually had a real speech therapist on staff, and after five minutes she pronounced not only was he normal for his age, but he was exceptionally bright and seemed like he was a few years ahead in his vocabulary, even if he couldn’t quite pronounce his "th" sounds yet.

    After we got over that hurdle, we learned that he was being picked on at school. Despite the school’s supposedly strict "no bullies" policy, our son, who was a year younger than most of his classmates but also taller than almost all of them, was in the same classroom with a boy who was almost two years older than most of the kindergartners. So now I found myself having to explain to my gentle 5-year-old how to handle an 8-year-old developmentally challenged gorilla who liked to express himself with his fists. We finally got the principal to take action after the teacher did nothing, but at the expense of his teacher now viewing us and our son as "the enemy" for getting her in trouble.

    And that was just the beginning of our experiences with private schools. At one point, our boy must have seen something on TV at the same time the class was studying Christ’s Passion in school, and he made a comment to somebody, somehow, somewhere, "Oh, just kill me." I think it was because he used the wrong color crayon or something. Suddenly, our then first-grader is supposedly likely to kill himself, he could be a danger to others, yada yada. So we take him to his first shrink, who pronounces him normal but unusually imaginative and, surprise, verbally gifted, and says that the boy was just acting out something he heard. We were not really surprised, but we were still relieved that everything was normal.

    Let me tell you, though, after something like that gets around, nothing’s normal ever again. Suddenly, we were the pariahs who were raising the next Columbine kid. We couldn’t buy a play date at that point. And our son was aware of it. He started hanging his head when he walked, playing by himself at recess, and we’d catch him calling himself "stupid" when things went awry. At that point, we had an opportunity to apply to another school. We went through all the hoops and got positive feedback from the interviewing teachers and so forth, but one of the deciding factors turned out to be a letter written to the new school by our son’s kindergarten teacher. We weren’t allowed to see the letter, but the tone of the interviewers changed drastically after they read it.

    Fortunately, we had another opportunity to get into a different school, this one Catholic, which is our denomination. Once again, we had high hopes for better results. Once again, those hopes were dashed. Our son wound up in a classroom with a first-year teacher who right off the bat pegged him as a troublemaker for whatever reason. This teacher, we later learned, had a habit of yelling at the kids, and she took out much of her aggression on our son. He began hating school and not wanting to do the incredible amount of homework they piled on every night. The next teacher was much nicer, but by then the damage was done. Even though our boy was capable of doing his homework perfectly (when he wanted to), he regularly flunked tests because they were time-limited and he would panic because he could hear his past teacher screaming at the kids next door.

    Just to add insult to injury, we finally realized that the curriculum at the school was the same state-created curriculum at public schools. They used the same texts and applied the same ridiculous schedule of 8 to 10 subjects per day, which hardly allows any time to absorb the information, much less understand it. The parents whose kids were doing well in class, we later learned, were going to Kumon classes after school. When our son needed extra help with multiplication, we were told he must be tutored. Well, the tutors at the school didn’t have time for us. We approached the youth director because her teens need service credits to graduate high school. No one volunteered to tutor our son. We were finally told he MUST have a professional tutor. We were given a name, supposedly of a parishioner, but no contact information. This person was not on record with the parish or the school office. The principal, who had recommended him, never came forth with a number. We contacted the church’s nuns. This particular order is charged with teaching children. That’s their gig. Within five minutes, the got back to us and said one of the sisters would tutor our son, but they wanted to talk to his teacher before setting up a schedule. They talked to his teacher apparently, then suddenly they weren’t available to help out.

    So in the final analysis, our own church school, using lay teachers to teach state curriculum out of state textbooks, happily accepts thousands of dollars in tuition but is unable to properly teach the children math, forcing parents to supplement with either a program like Kumon or, in our case, nonexistent tutors.

    We spent somewhere between $25,000 and $30,000 on tuition, uniforms and other expenses in the vain hope of giving our child a decent education. All that happened was a gaggle of overpaid strangers slowly strangled his curiosity and crushed his desire to learn, leaving him a bundle of nerves at the age of 8.

    Sometimes it’s the educator who needs to be reminded of what he already knows. My child is too important to me, and I think someday to the world, to leave in the hands of a capricious public or private education system that, ultimately, is designed to produce conforming drones, not thinkers. We, as his parents, cannot simply stand by and watch the life being squeezed out of him like the juice from a lemon.

    The reality is that we, like most parents, have allowed this to happen for far too long because it was convenient to let our son be raised by strangers.

    No more.

    We had started supplementing his education with materials from a local home schooling program when he began having grade trouble and as a "backup" because of the monkey business school administrators liked to be up to, such as putting new students on "probation" for no reason.

    We’ve decided to take the plunge and just home school. It will be a change, for sure, and a lot of responsibility, but the incredible improvement we’ve already seen in our boy’s attitude and aptitude is making it worthwhile.

    I’ve encountered many parents with stories similar to ours. We apparently are part of a growing movement to take back education from the millers who are running the system.

    Having been through the system myself, and having seen what it nearly did to my child, I no longer believe in "reforming" the education system, reducing class sizes or raising teachers’ salaries. If the government insists on dabbling in education, then what is needed is a wholesale elimination of what we have now. A replacement system would start with teachers who are trained in a subject other than "education," have an administrator-to-teacher ratio on the order of 1-to-20, eliminate the nonsensical scale of grade levels and let students achieve at their own speed in the needed skills.

    How do I know that would work? Because that’s essentially what we’ve created with our own home schooling group, and it is working spectacularly well. There are kids who have gone through the same program and entered college by age 15. Many of the teens in the program or formerly in the program have successful businesses. My son’s only 8, so we’ve got lots of working and growing ahead to do, but for the first time in a long time, both he and his parents are looking forward to it.

    Tad Cronn is an author and editor in West Hills, CA. More of his work may be seen at http://www.the-free-lance.com.

    Posted on Apr 22nd, 2007

    Every day more and more homeschoolers finish their High school studies and start a new journey into college. Many feel that this is the jumping off point for homeschooling. That it is time to join the masses in formal education. Well, not necessarily. For those who have been successful with self study and independent learning why not continue that success into a college career.

    Traditional College Alternatives

    The obvious alternative is online college. But there is another option that is a more natural progression to the homeschooled self paced, self designed curriculum and that is to earn a degree with credit by examination. Credit by examination provides a truly self paced and independent learning environment. Exams are offered in a wide variety of subjects through testing programs such as CLEP, DSST, ECE and GRE subject exams. Majors within the fields of Business, Technology, Health Sciences, Social Sciences and Liberal Arts are all available entirely through examinations.

    Credit by examination can also be a very inexpensive option since most three to six credit exams can cost as little as $60. Compare that to the $300 to $900 price tag for traditional college courses. There is no shortage of study material for these exams. Each testing organization, along with third party vendors, offers a variety of study options at very reasonable prices. Even if a student doesn’t complete an entire degree with examinations, thousands of colleges around the U.S. accept these credits in transfer. This may be an economical way to start college studies while determining the best path to a college degree.

    Which Colleges?

    Three accredited institutions in the U.S. that will confer degrees based entirely on credit by examination are:

    Excelsior College - Private college in Albany, New York that specializes in meeting the needs of adult learners.

    Thomas Edison State College - Public College in Trenton, New Jersey that specializes in Distance Education.

    Charter Oak State College - Public College located in New Britain, Connecticut.

    Don’t feel that high school has to be the last stop in homeschool education. There are options. Do your research and make sure that the school you choose is recognized by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation.

    You can read more about testing out of college with credit by exam at testing out of college with credit by exam at DegreeWiz.com

    About the author: Jack Mize, the "Degree Wiz", tested out of three years of college in less than one year using credit by examination. He spent less than $3000 total on tution, testing fees and study materials.

    Jack graduated with a B.S. in Liberal Studies from Excelsior College and M.S. in Information Archtecture from Capitol College.

    Posted on Apr 21st, 2007

    Fractions are the pits. You know you can’t just add or subtract them even though multiplying and dividing them is not too bad. But since addition is the most popular arithmetic operation, that’s where the darn problem is. I mean those pesky denominators always get in the way. Yet fractions appear everywhere you look: look at the price of gas, which is hovering about $3.00 per gallon and you see something like “Unleaded Regular - $2.79 9/10"; or take a look at the unit prices in supermarkets and you might see something like 33 ½ cents per pound, or 16 1/3 cents per ounce. Let’s face it, you’re not escaping these little monsters so you better just get used to them.

    So how do you deal with these nasty little creatures? Well, if you’ve followed some of my writings on this topic (see my ebook “Fractions for the Faint of Heart”), then you know that it really is not that hard to work with fractions. You just need some simple tools which I lay out in my books and articles on this subject. These tools will help you or your child deal a death blow to the seemingly unending array of problems that fractions can cause.

    An important point to make here is that fractions are an integral part of any child’s mathematical education, and, if not learned properly, can severely hinder progress in this subject: all of mathematics either directly or indirectly ties to numbers, and yes, fractions make up a large portion of the real number system which is used extensively in algebra, geometry, and even the Calculus. As pointed out above, children become frustrated with fractions because you can’t add or subtract them like one does with ordinary numbers. With fractions, you need a common denominator before the addition or subtraction operation is negotiated..

    Reaching the common ground with fractions—common ground being the common denominator—is not difficult once a little trick is learned. For example, to add 3/10 and 2/15 all you need do is ask, “What is common to 10 and 15?” That is what is the largest number that divides both 10 and 15? The largest number to do this feat is 5, and this is known as the greatest common factor of 10 and 15. Thus multiply 10 and 15 together to get 150, then divide this result by 5 to get 30. This last number is the least common denominator of both 10 and 15. Now to finish off our problem of adding 3/10 and 2/15 we find out how many times each of the denominators goes into the number 30. In this case we have 30/10 is 3 and 30/15 is 2. We multiply each of these quotients 3 and 2 by the respective numerators 3 and 2 to get 3×3 is 9 and 2×2 is 4. We add these last two results, 9 and 4, to get 13. We put this number over the common denominator 30 to get our final answer of 13/30. That’s it folks. Nothing too hard to learn. And this method works all the time.

    So get on board with fractions and don’t let their seemingly bullying attitudes get to you or your children. For you can beat these numbers at their game every time and turn that expression of “I hate fractions!” into one of “I love fractions!” Just watch your kids’ grades soar in mathematics once they master fractions.

    Joe is a prolific writer of self-help and educational material and an award-winning former teacher of both college and high school mathematics. Under the penname, JC Page, Joe authored Arithmetic Magic, the little classic on the ABC’s of arithmetic. Joe is also author of the charming self-help ebook, Making a Good Impression Every Time: The Secret to Instant Popularity; the original collection of poetry, Poems for the Mathematically Insecure, and the short but highly effective fraction troubleshooter Fractions for the Faint of Heart. The diverse genre of his writings (novel, short story, essay, script, and poetry)—particularly in regard to its educational flavor— continues to captivate readers and to earn him recognition.

    Joe propagates his teaching philosophy through his articles and books and is dedicated to helping educate children living in impoverished countries. Toward this end, he donates a portion of the proceeds from the sale of every ebook. For more information go to http://www.mathbyjoe.com.

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